Eight Things You Might Not Have Known About LGBT African Americans

When it comes to bringing us LGBT data from the far reaches of mainstream issues, there’s no organization better at caring and achieving the feat more than the Williams Institute. The California think-tank’s latest home run has to do with the black portion of the LGBT population.

SFGN published a profile earlier this month about the institute, highlighting Williams’ capacity and its effect on modern LGBT activism. This newest study is no surprise to us.

SFGN asked Gates, who’s an expert in LGBT demographics, why there should be research targeted at black LGBT people.

"Because of limited data availability, very few studies are able to consider possible differences in characteristics of the LGBT community across racial and ethnic groups. Data from the U.S. Census Bureau and data collected by Gallup offer a rare opportunity to focus on the geographic and demographic characteristics of racial and ethnic minorities who identify as LGBT or who are part of a same-sex couple," Gates said.

"The analyses highlight the diversity of the LGBT community and show that some of the socio-economic challenges that racial and ethnic minorities face in U.S. society are shared by LGBT people of color."

Of course, of the results below, many are connected to the inequality rampant across the U.S., Kastenis said.

"LGBT African-American parents and their children evidence significant economic disadvantage, and many live in states without LGBT anti-discrimination laws or marriage equality," she said in a statement. "Establishing these important legal protections could really help these families."

Here are some of the research’s key findings, taken directly from the study:

Overall, how African-American same-sex couples fare compared to their different-sex counterparts varies significantly depending on the gender of the couple and whether the couple is raising children.

About 23 percent of LGBT African-Americans have completed a college degree or more, compared to 26 percent of non-LGBT African-Americans.

African-American same-sex couples are less likely than their different-sex counterparts to have health insurance coverage for both partners (63 percent vs. 79 percent).

Notably, 58 percent of African-American same-sex couples are female.

Female African-American individuals in same-sex couples are three times more likely to report veteran status than those in different-sex couples (9 percent vs. 3 percent). About 1 in 7 male African- American individuals in same-sex couples have served in the military compared to 1 in 4 male African-American individuals in different-sex couples (13 percent vs. 25 percent).

The Center for Black Equityand the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health are partnering on a new research project to study reasons for increased risk of HIV infection among African-American men who have sex with men.

Forty gay couples in South Dakota applied to be married during the first month following a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that legalized such unions across the country, according to data provided by the state Department of Health.